Piping Today 78 Free Feature

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PROMOTING THE MUSIC, HISTORY & STUDY OF THE BAGPIPES

FREE FEATURE SAMPLE

FRED M O R R I S O N

The real life of...

Iain Speirs

Taking it to a new level

Grey’s Notes by Michael Grey

Balagan Pipe Band

The gift that keeps giving

Ready to stir things up

Canadians savour the Glenfiddich The Glenfiddich Championship 2015

Theory top-up by Tim Cummings Tunes in G-Major

Pipe Major James Murray A new life with WAPOL

The London Competition 2015 The Scottish Piping Society of London

free feature sample • from Dec 15/Jan 16 • Issue Number 78 •

N Y P B o S n e w s l e t t e r N o . 75

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contents

Editorial 5 Roddy MacLeod News 6

Fred Morrison Taking it to a new level

8

Balagan Pipe Band Ready to stir things up

14

Theory Top-Up by Tim Cummings Tunes in G-Major

21

Brothers on the bagpipes Sons of the Most Holy Reedemer

22

Youngstars Newsletter No.75 Q&A with Calum Craib

23

Canadians savour the Glenfiddich Glenfiddich Piping Championship 2015

28

New life and opportunities at WAPOL Pipe Major James Murray

34

Iain Speirs The real life of...

36

The London Competition 2015 The Scottish Piping Society of London

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FRONT COVER PICTURE: Fred Morrison in concert at Celtic Connections 2012 by John Slavin. See feature on pages 8-13.

Competition League for Amateur Solo Pipers 43 10 questions with Sean Moloney

Product Reviews 44 New CD reviews

Grey’s Notes by Michael Grey The gift that keeps giving

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www.thepipingcentre.co.uk EDITOR: Roddy MacLeod MBE, BSc • FEATURES MANAGER: John Slavin • PUBLISHER: © The National Piping Centre 2015 CORRESPONDENCE: The National Piping Centre, 30-34 McPhater Street, Glasgow, Scotland. G4 0HW. Tel. +44 (0)141 353 0220 EDITORIAL ENQUIRIES: pipingtoday@designfolk.com • ADVERTISING ENQUIRIES: hwilkinson@thepipingcentre.co.uk DESIGN & ADVERT ARTWORK: John Slavin/DesignFolk - email: pipingtoday@designfolk.com • www.designfolk.com


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NEWS

Final frontier for bagpipes

M

ANY pipemakers claim that their instruments are out of this world — but now one firm has proof after a set of McCallum Bagpipes were played by an astronaut on the International Space Station. American Kjell Lindgren played Amazing Grace as a tribute after the death of his colleague Victor Hurst, a research scientist who had been involved in astronaut training. It’s the first time the bagpipes have been played in space. Kjell approached the Kilmarnock firm in 2013 because he wanted to play the pipes on his International Space Station mission and bought a set of acetyl pipes. Director Kenny MacLeod said: “He wondered

News in brief The International Bagpipe Conference will bring together bagpipe musicians, academics and enthusiasts from all around the world at the National Piping Centre next year. The biennial event, which takes place from February 26 to 28, is being organised in collaboration with the National Piping Centre, the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and Glasgow University with the support of the Bagpipe Society. The RCS will host an opening concert featuring the Scott Wood Trio on the Friday night. The conference itself runs on the Saturday and Sunday, when bagpipe specialists from all over Europe will exchange knowledge about their instruments, music and culture. A social evening with a ceilidh and an organised open mic will be held on the Saturday evening.

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if it was feasible to play bagpipes. They’re made of plastic — they’re easier to keep clean and to make sure they’re not contaminated. They’re also lighter. “Bagpipes are very difficult to play at high altitude because the air is that bit thinner. They’re quite hard to blow so he’s done well.” The video of Kjell playing the pipes was released by US space agency NASA in November. It has been viewed more than 40,000 times on YouTube and also featured on the BBC, news websites and in the press. One viewer commented: “No matter how cool you think you are, you’ll never be astronaut-playingbagpipes-in-space cool.”

Organisers are promising there will be “thought provoking ideas, instrument stalls and curious sounds from all around the world”. Tickets are available by searching for International Bagpipe Conference on www.eventbrite.com.

On the move FOLLOWING the end of the pipe band competition season, some leading outfits have announced key changes to their personnel. At Grade 1 World Champions Shotts and Dykehead Caledonia, Jim Kilpatrick is no longer leading drummer. Andrew Lawson will take over the role. Also in Grade 1, piper and reedmaker Rory Grossart has left Scottish Power to be joint pipe sergeant with Duncan Nicholson at Greater Glasgow Police Scotland Pipe Band, under pipe major Iain MacPherson.

Print your own pipes A SCOTS smallpipe player has embraced 3D printing technology to create his own range of instruments. Donald Lindsay, from Glasgow, used a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign online to get support to buy two 3D printers. The small pipes he has designed and printed have a greater range than traditional instruments and he has also created Highland drones and a penny whistle. Customers can pay to print off the kit sets on their own 3D printers but the bag, reeds and chanter are not included. Find out more about Donald’s innovations at lindstruments.com.

In Grade 2, Colin McClelland, the PM of the Pipes and Drums of The Police Service of Northern Ireland, has stepped down to be replaced by Robert Cupples. l Entries are now being accepted for The National Piping Centre’s annual Junior Piping Championship, which will be held in Glasgow on Saturday, Februrary 20. The Junior Championship is open to all pipers aged 15-17, with three events — Piobaireachd; March, Strathspey & Reel and Jig. The Novice Championship is open to all pipers aged under 15, with four events — Piobaireachd; Piobaireachd (ground only); March; Strathspey & Reel. There is also a chanter contest. To enter or for more infomation about the event, visit www.thepipingcentre.co.uk/about/junior-pipingcompetition/. The closing date for entries is Friday, February 5, 2016.

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Celtic Connections is a cause for piping celebration THE programme for Celtic Connections in January in Glasgow packs in plenty to whet even the most discerning piping fan’s appetite. One of the most ambitious concerts in the 18-day festival is the celebration of the famous Live in Ireland 87 performance by Canada’s 78th Fraser Highlanders Pipe Band, just a few days before they became the first non-Scottish band to win the Grade 1 title at the World Pipe Band Championship. Fast-forward almost 30 years and a dozen members of the legendary line-up are joined by other household names of the piping world, including Ryan Canning, Ian Duncan, Stuart Liddell, Steven McWhirter, Duncan Nicholson, Richard Parkes, Terry Tully and Ross Walker. The piping extravaganza at Glasgow Royal Concert Hall on January 30 is co-hosted by John Wilson and Bob Worrall. Another cause for celebration is the 50th anniversary of Armagh Pipers Club and the group’s achievement in ensuring uilleann piping and other traditional instruments continue to thrive is marked with a concert on January 20 at the Old Fruitmarket. Founders Brian and Eithne Vallely host a lavish lineup of illustrious alumni and associated acts, including their sons Cillian, Niall and Caoimhin’s bands, Lúnasa and Buille, together with Flook, and award-winning pipers Jarlath Henderson and Tiarnán Ó Duinnchinn. The legacy of Gordon Duncan’s music is honoured with a concert titled Just for Gordon – Celebrating a National Treasure. The bill for the gig at Glasgow Royal Concert Hall on January 24, includes The Tannahill Weavers while Galicia’s Susana Seivane reflects his pioneering embrace of wider Celtic traditions. Other featured keepers of the flame include Ross Ainslie, Ali Hutton, Jarlath Henderson, Angus McColl, Allan MacDonald, Stuart Liddell, Duncan Chisholm, Julie Fowlis and The National Youth Pipe Band of Scotland. The programme also features a variety of bands showcasing the power of the pipes. These include Dàimh, who will host a grand Gaelic ceilidh at Glasgow Royal Concert Hall on January 15 and folk rockers Skerryvore, who perform the same night at the Old Fruitmarket. Scott Wood’s fiery piping sets the pace in his five piece band, who bring whistles, guitar, bass and drums to the mix. They play Òran Mór on January 16. It wouldn’t be a festival without the Peatbog Faeries, who have almost 20 years experience of taking the traditional bagpipes and fiddle front line

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into different musical dimensions. Catch them at the O2 ABC Glasgow on January 23. The Big Music Society present something different at the Drygate Brewery on January 22. The project is masterminded by pipers John Mulhearn and Calum MacCrimmon and this gig showcases Fraser Fifield, acclaimed for his experimentation across Celtic, east European, jazz and electronic music, and New Yorker Matthew Welch and his band Blarvuster, who combine bagpipe tradition with Indonesian gamelan music, rock and jazz. RURA, with their thrilling bagpipes and fiddle-led instrumentals and exquisite ballads from singer Adam Holmes, play the Old Fruitmarket on January 29. Having won Live Act of the Year at the 2014 Scots Trad Music Awards, you would expect Skipinnish to put on a good show. Their line-up includes piper Andrew Stevenson and Kyle Orr on pipes and whistles. and for their gig at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall on January 30, piper Duncan Nicholson will be a guest. And looking to the future, emerging talent from the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland’s BMus Traditional Music and BA Scottish Music degree courses get a well-deserved showcase at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall’s Strathclyde Suite on January 16. For more information about these concerts, other gigs in the progamme or to book, visit www.celticconnections.com. Tickets can also be booked by calling the box office on 0141 353 8000.

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World-class workshops at Florida festival THE National Piping Centre are offering worldclass piping and drumming tuition at the Dunedin Tide Festival of Piping in the US state of Florida in April. The festival kicks off on Friday, April 1, in the city of Dunedin with piping and drumming workshops, a pipe band parade, instructors’ piping recital and ceilidh. The action on Saturday, April 2, centres around

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Dunedin Highland Games, which includes solo and pipe band competitions. More piping and drumming workshops will be held on the Sunday, when amateur piping competitions will also take place. For more information and how to book, visit www. thepipingcentre.co.uk/bagpipe-drumming-schools/ dunedin-tide-festival-of-piping/.

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NEWS

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PROFILE

FRED T

All photos: John Slavin@designfolk.com

here is a moment in every Fred Morrison concert where the jaws of those who haven’t seen him before hit the ground like Tom’s just after Jerry has put an anvil in it. Despite their gaping mouths, they aren’t breathing, as they stare transfixed at the stage to see what on earth Fred’s fingers are doing. As the Hard Drive goes into overdrive with Fred at full throttle, they understand exactly why people had told them to see him perform live. For the rest of the concert they sit in foot-tapping, hand-clapping, eye-popping awe along with the

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by Chris MacKenzie

morrison rest of the audience, and like everyone else they know they will be back for more the next time Fred is in town. Now for the first time, those who have had that live experience can relive it and those that haven’t can get a taste of it, as the Fred Morrison Trio — Fred plus Martin O’Neill on bodhran and Mattheu Watson on guitar — have released the Live at The Glasgow Royal Concert Hall CD. I took the opportunity during Piping Live! to catch up with Fred and talk about the CD and his approach to music.

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PROFILE Although he has been around the piping scene for more than 30 years, the live album is only is Fred’s fifth recording — The Broken Chanter, Up South, The Sound of the Sun and Outlands. He puts the sparse discography down to the era he grew up in. Fred said: “CDs were such a major thing and I’ve always viewed it as an artistic decision and never as a business decision — and I should. I have been meaning to start releasing CDs more regularly. “I’ve got loads of new material for a new studio CD and I’d like to start recording that in the winter, but I’m inundated with things to do and time is a problem. If I could record it between winter and spring for release a year from now I’d be quite happy but right now is insane.” Fans have long wanted Fred to record a live album to capture the great atmosphere and energy of his shows. He said: “So many people have been saying to me. Jimmy Neilson, engineer on Outlands, said ‘I can do that for you, I’ll bring some gear along and record it’. A lot of people do a live album over a tour but we did it on one night. We were all gigged-in — Martin, Mattheu and I — we knew the material inside out”. For many years Fred was piping’s best kept secret. Very well known in piping environs but not so well known beyond that. The bluegrassinfused Outlands changed all that. He said: “It took us to another level. It opened an awful lot of doors all over the place. “I’ve always loved bluegrass and I find it very similar to our own rhythms. Of course, it came from our rhythms and I love the high tempos they play. “I decided to make something that was a bit more universally appealing. I wanted to choose material that everyone can enjoy and share and also something the guys in the States who were going to be recording on it could lock into. “The kind of music I grew up with in Uist was pushing notes here and stretching notes there, so I had to really pull it all in. I was researching the tempos they use and they were playing from 138 beats per minute and upwards, really high tempos especially with the improvisation and ornamentation.

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‘It took us to another level. It opened an awful lot of doors all over the place’

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PROFILE

Ron Block

“It was a great recording process. I remember sitting down and saying: ‘Right I have to write a really kicking bluegrass piece.’ So I started from scratch and wrote the Hard Drive in one afternoon. “I sent it over to Tim O’Brien who recorded it in the Butcher Shoppe studio in Nashville, where Johnny Cash had recorded. “I was packing up in the studio with Jimmy Neilson, who is now a legend, when he came through with a wee memory stick to me and he said: ‘That’s it straight back from Nashville, I’ve just downloaded it’. “Tim had layered three instruments on it. He’d put down guitar, bluegrass fiddle and mandolin and I think that has to be the high point when I heard it in the studio — I was just so chuffed. It was exactly what I’d been looking for. It had exactly the right tempo, excitement and chordal backing and I thought:

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Tim O’Brien

or trio tour before Christmas. Now every concert is sold out — Eden Court sold out, Stornoway sold out, Stirling sold out — these are 250 or 300 seat concerts. There are pipers there in the audiences but the vast bulk is the general public who have seen The Transatlantic Sessions or they’ve heard Outlands, or they like The Kansas City Hornpipe and the Hard Drive. There are a lot of favourites they’ll ask for at every gig. So in all honesty the audience did change.” That we have reached the place where piping is in the mainstream is undoubtedly due in major part to the efforts of the trio of Fred, and the sadly late Gordon Duncan and Martyn Bennett. I asked how comfortable he is with his part in the transition. Fred feels that the tradition keeps on moving and says that there’s a theory that perhaps the best of the tradition is yet to come. And certainly the scene has changed since he was taken by his father to watch the Tannahill Weavers on his 14th birthday in 1978. He said: “Alan MacLeod was playing pipes with them and that guy was a maverick, a one-off. It was the first time we had

‘There were big bearded guys up on chairs air-piping — that is the truth’ ‘This is what I’ve been looking for on this album’.” The other musicians involved in the recording had a massive influence on the project. Fred explained: “They were so tight with timing. We would send it to Ron Block, the five-string banjo player who plays with Allison Krauss’s Union Station. He’d work on it in his home studio in Nashville and he would learn every single improvised note, even the tiniest note, and he had it nailed on the five string. “I don’t know how, he must have stopped and started a million times. It was just immaculate, absolutely mind-blowing. Their standard of precision and delivery, yet keeping the musicality, really impressed me. Of course, I also had Matthew and Martin who are two of Scotland’s finest.” The album was, of course, a big hit and opened up a whole new audience and not just the traditional piping crowd. Fred said: “It’s just completely different. In the winter I always do a huge solo, duo

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PROFILE heard the pipes with that kind of folk group, I know people had dabbled before — but this was new. “The City Halls were packed and when Alan came in on the pipes, there were big bearded guys up on chairs air-piping — that is the truth. Alan was playing high tempos and he was expressing tremendous music and I remember thinking that’s absolutely brilliant. But at the time, the frowns and the harsh criticism he got — a lot of people looked down on it. “In 1983, myself, Allan MacDonald and Gordon Duncan went over to the Lorient Festival in Brittany and that was the start of a bit of a revolution. All of us had done well in junior and professional competitions and we were winning prizes and knocking on the doors of the medals. When you do that people have to listen. They could knock Alan MacLeod and say: ‘It’s all very well but how would he do at Oban?’. But I would say to them ‘Let me hear you do what he does with that flair, that expression’. “Because we were in the scene, people weren’t as harsh, but there was still a lot of frowning and people saying things like ‘That’s a shame he could have be a great player.’ “After that, Gordon was playing with the Tannahill Weavers and I was playing with Capercaillie and for the first time really using the key of A reel or Border pipes and that was a bit of a door opener. “We did the Rob Roy theme tune and we were gigging everywhere. People realised you can in play in A with the same acoustic compatibility as fiddles and other instruments. So people began to use them in pubs and sessions and that really grew a lot. “The original Celtic Connections piping concerts were brilliant — Paddy Keenan, Liam O’Flynn, Kathryn Tickell, myself, Gordon, Dr Angus, I remember all those. Celtic Connections had a massive role to play.”

“Then with the first Piping Live! In 2004 and the launch of BBC Alba in 2008, everybody began to share more. That was a real growing time. Now in Piping Live!, you hear guys in pipe bands saying, ‘Did you hear this folk band?’ and the guys in the folk band saying, ‘Did you hear Field Marshal Montgomery or did you hear the Shotts?’ And you get the guys on the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland degree course who are totally clued up about the pipes. They’ll have a go on the reel pipes or the uilleann pipes or the low whistle, that’s where it’s all happening. If I had any part to play in it, it’s an honour and I really hope I did.” “As a tradition, we are living and breathing. I think we are in a much healthier position but I’m interested to see where it’s going to go to. I think there is a lot less knocking and negativity around.” Audiences who have had the pleasure of listening to Fred play live over the years will be familiar with how he likes to ring the changes at each concert. Subtle changes are made to familiar tunes, he may play the tune on a different instrument, or Martin and Mattheu may do something different. It means the concerts have a fresh feel as tunes are never played the same way twice. Fred said: “They are great players and they are very quick and that’s wha t m a k es it fun. If I do something they are on it straight away. Sometimes Martin and I might do something or Mattheu and I or they might do something behind me. That’s when it’s really happening.

“I really enjoy it and I feel good and I like sharing it with the audience, I like the craic. I always like a good feel with the gigs even if you are playing the slow stuff. I really enjoy that. “There was a real turning point in my musical career when I went over to Brittany with Allan and Gordon in 1983. I’d been busking in Amsterdam and I met Billy Kelly and Miriam Kelly, great musicians, and they introduced me to the playing of Paddy Keenan, the Bothy Band and all that. They said: ‘Never mind all that rigid playing, these guys improvise all the time’. “At that time I met Paddy Keenan in Quimper in Brittany playing in a pub. I heard him again in 1986 just playing in a bar and it was one of the best things ever. It was mindblowing with the subtlety of the improvisation never repeating a phrase. Something went ding in my head. “With our Highland pipes we have amazing ornamentation, grips, torluaths, doublings, birls, things that rattle, things that pop, things that bubble — and it got me thinking it would be great if you could actually choose and repeat a few of them and use them to effect — and that was when I really left solo piping, at the age of maybe 23. “At the age of 22 I’d won the Gold Medal and won a lot of major prizes but at 23 I sat back and decided to teach myself how to improvise. I could hear what I wanted to do but I wanted to get to a level where it sounded more than just a hiccup. Learning to improvise was almost a kind of meditation and relaxation until I got it, then it’s just like a language. Just as we speak, the words come to you as you go. That’s the way I view it.

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PROFILE “Piping predates staff notation by a long way. How could a piece in the Outer Hebrides be the same as it was in Glencoe? It couldn’t be, there was no accessibility. I was thinking about this and how it has an authenticity and I was looking at the old manuscripts like Glen’s and Queen Victoria’s Willie Ross. I was looking at the different settings and ornamentation and you could see it was an older and wilder style of playing. It’s dead easy too. You do hear people go over the top and it sounds flash, with too many bendy notes — it’s the subtlety, the choosing that’s important.” Once a player has the confidence to improvise, it can be tempting to add too much ornamentation. It’s a tricky balancing act but

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Fred has been inspired by the approach of some of the biggest names in traditional music. Fred admitted: “It’s taste. Jazz players rely on that all the time. “Keep the heid and start simply. Choose a really nice slow air and even if you just change one gracenote in a part, develop it slowly. For some people it will develop very quickly, for others it will take longer but they are thinking and if they do that they are developing their style — what they are thinking or how they are feeling — and it’s giving identity to their playing. “The people that have influenced me are Paddy Keenan, Tommy Peoples and Kevin Burke and you just hear some beautiful wee

touches of improvisation in their playing. The tiniest wee thing that’s so lovely on the spur of the moment and it just sounds wonderful. “I wonder what Donald MacLeod would have been like with his genius and creativity if he had improvised? It would have been unbelievable.” “I learned a really strong South Uist canntaireachd. That’s the way my dad taught me. Everything was Uisteach canntaireachd. When I meet people like Rona Lightfoot, Seonaidh Roidean, Calum Campbell, we would all have the same canntaireachd. I’d be surprised if singing a tune with Rona in canntaireachd we wouldn’t be gracenote perfect.

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PROFILE “The interesting thing is if you can hear that while you are playing, you can improvise in the canntaireachd so you’re not thinking of a written representation. Instead you can use the language of canntaireachd to repeat phrases or leave things out to make it more embellished. The canntaireachd is great for that. “It’s great for kids to know the theory of music and they can use it to good effect. But I think they should know how to sing the tune so it gets right through their soul. If they can sing it, it is in their brain, that to me is how you get it from the inside of you out. Rather than being someone who just reproduces what on the page, that’s how you get the personality and the feel.” As he touched on earlier, Fred has an impressive competitive piping pedigree — a double Gold Medallist (Argyllshire 1986, Northern Meeting 1991) who has competed at the Glenfiddich championships. Although he moved away from the boards for many years, recently he has returned to playing at major competitions. Fred laughed: “Why? I’m asking myself that regularly, I really am — it’s like I don’t have enough to do with six or seven other instruments. The main reason is the music to be honest. That was my musical upbringing — solo piping. I enjoyed it and I really love playing these big piobaireachds. “In the last three years it has been big cracking tunes, Donald Gruamach’s March, The Laird of Anapool — and it’s good music. The big tunes are great and it really tests the stamina of your instrument as well. You have to get this instrument that is going to be locked in from start to finish and that’s like a revisited challenge for me. And the big MSRs too. They are great tunes and it’s a good scene with lots of friends. Once you are brought up with that it never leaves you.” Now that improvisation is such a large part of his performing repertoire, it takes a special discipline to adapt once more to competition piping. Fred said: “I guess it’s just respect for everyone really — for the piece itself, for the composer and for the scene we are in. I’ve got no intentions of going in there to rock the boat. I know the way the game is played and sometimes to hear the classic settings has its own musical beauty. If I hear the way GS McLennan wrote Mrs MacPherson of Inveran, it’s magic and I’m honoured to play it, or some

of the great 2/4 marches by John MacColl or Donald MacLeod, it’s just an honour to play them in those settings. “I’m very open minded and I hate to hear it when one faction knocks the others. That’s the only thing I don’t like. If somebody is out there honestly playing pipes whether it is in solos, bands, groups or whatever, then more power to their elbow and if some people want to cross over, great.” “I love improvising and writing my own stuff, I love all of that but I love the classic stuff too, just as much. “I have done examining for the piping degree course and it’s really brilliant. They come up and they give you a good MSR and a good piobaireachd, but yet they give you something else as well. In the repertoire for their exams may be 19th century tunes or contemporary suites they put together themselves. Some might bring a guitarist or a percussionist and some might throw in the odd natural note here and there depending on the mode of the tune — but they will give you a good MSR and a right good piobaireachd as well on a good instrument and to me that’s what piping is all about. “Know the classic stuff and treat it right with a good pipe and then play the other stuff — that’s what we have been trying to achieve.” Given the broad range of his talents and appeal which extends beyond the piping scene, it’s no surprise that he is in demand around the world. He said: “I’m in the States at least three times a year, sometimes more. I’m out every October touring all the way up to Cape Breton in Canada, then I’ve got a solo tour here. In

January I’m probably going to New Zealand, then back, and off to Kansas, then back and in February I’m off to Seattle. Then I’m off to Australia for a month. It’s mental.” If the composing, recording, gigging, exam marking, competitions and travelling weren’t enough there is also the matter of the Fred Morrison Reel pipes and smallpipes, made by McCallum Bagpipes. Both are proving a hit with Highland pipers as they can use the same fingering yet the pipes allow them to play along with other instruments. Fred explained: “The pipes are so popular now. There’s a lot of smallpipes that go worldwide. We are bringing out our new uilleann pipes very soon. We’re hoping that Highland pipers might have a crack at them as they are amazing things to play.” There is no doubt that in the last 30 years, Fred has had a profound impact on not just the piping scene in Scotland but also the wider music scene. He was at the vanguard of the move to expand piping from the big set piece competitions and he is still right at the front of that, decades on, he just has a lot of people for company now. Yet he lives and breathes the competitive scene and can play a piobaireachd that will reach deep into your soul. He composes tunes that rapidly become standards and has reached an audience in all corners of the world that didn’t even know it liked pipe music. Influence is an often abused word but in this case it is safe to say, Fred Morrison has and continues to positively influence the world of piping as we know it. So if you haven’t already, go and see him live. Just watch out for that anvil! l

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NEW PRODUCTS

CD Reviews Ross Ainslie Remembering

arrival of Ross Ainslie the singer/songwriter, but as continued affirmation of Ross Ainslie the traditional musician. Gordon Duncan did more than any other piper of his generation to reclaim our place in the wider pantheon of traditional music, and thanks to albums like this, remembering his achievements has never been more pleasurable. l stuart milne

GWR003CD

The Peatbog Faeries Blackhouse CDBOG007

While Blackhouse will be too much for traditionalist pipers still begrudging the popularity of rock and pop covers on the bagpipes, if you’re looking for a way to get your clubber friend to take traditional Scottish music seriously, then there could be no better starting point than the Peatbog Faeries. l stuart milne

Ross Munro Twisted Tradition CDTRAX384

I

t is not difficult to detect the main inspiration behind Ross Ainslie’s latest album. Ten years on from his untimely passing, the presence of Ross’s mentor and friend Gordon Duncan, thanked in the sleeve notes simply “for everything”, is felt throughout the aptly titled Remembering. Since Gordon was renowned for pushing musical boundaries, it is fitting that his prolific pupil should reveal a new side to his artistry – writing and performing his own songs. The album opens with Change, which seems to speak of the inner struggle that has sadly blighted many of our most gifted musicians, especially the telling lines: “Self destruction is the easy way/But the dark shadow carries on”. Elsewhere the lyrical qualities of the songs are mixed, ranging from the mysterious Friday night romance of Dreaming Daisy (“A bird and a bee/Went out on a spree/Talk of the town they’re together”) to the bizarre and clunky in Nowhere to Go Part B (“Run run I should run/That guy there has got a gun”). Ross’s singing voice is also not particularly striking or clear, requiring the occasional glance through the sleeve notes to check the lyrics. Predictably, he is on surer ground with the instrumental side. There are a host of supporting musicians, including Gordon’s father Jock and son Gordy Jnr, Ross’s perennial collaborator Ali Hutton on guitar and several additional vocalists. Across the album, the various string instruments combine with Ross’s whistles and pipes and the accordion of John Somerville for an effect delightfully pleasing to the ear, creating many moments of real beauty. Standout tracks include the appropriately uplifting song Head High and the sumptuous slow air Lullaby for Mel, the centrepiece of the Vale of Atholl Pipe Band’s 2014 competition medley. Perhaps the best gem on the album is Jock Speaks, a masterfully concise life story narrated in under a minute by bothy ballad singer Jock Duncan (a handwritten copy is helpfully included in the sleeve notes for those needing a translation), with tasteful musical accompaniment creating an effect reminiscent of another great Scottish game-changer, Martyn Bennett. Remembering should be welcomed not as the PAGE 16

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n starting up the Peatbog Faeries’ latest album, Blackhouse, you could be forgiven for thinking you’ve accidentally turned on a trance record. The electronic wall of sound that hits you at the very beginning of the first track Is This Your Son? immediately proclaims this as the edgiest work to date of a band already renowned as one of the most headbopping live acts in traditional music. However, anyone worried they are about to sit through a Now! That’s What I Call Music compilation can rest assured that the album is still built around the fiddles of Ross Couper and pipes and whistles (five, to be exact) of prolific composer Peter Morrison. The duo have written every tune except for The Dragon’s Apprentice, penned by one Archie Maclean from the Isle of Skye at the ripe old age of nine. In keeping with the Peatbogs’ usual style, each track consists of only one tune played several times, but the support from guitar and Ebow player Tom Salter, keyboardist Graeme Stafford, bassist Innes Hutton and percussionist Stu Haikney is so varied and sophisticated that the effect is rarely if ever repetitive. Although a few tracks are at Friday night dance floor tempo, such as the ceilidh-inspired Spider’s, the majority are surprisingly chilled and gentle despite the prevailing electronica vibe, especially the lovely slow-burner Angus and Joyce Mackay and the tranquil fiddle tune The Chatham Lassies. The closing track, Strictly Sambuca, is the most arresting, at once pulsating with rhythm and for the most part pleasingly calm. It genuinely sounds like a dance number mixed by a global superstar DJ and would easily fit into the setlist of a fashionable nightclub (not that this reviewer has ever been to any).

A

s pipe major of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, Ross Munro was a key architect of Spirit of the Glen: Journey, which won the regiment a Classical Brit Award in 2009. Now retired from the army, he seeks to consolidate his new career as a professional musician with his first solo album, Twisted Tradition. Many of the tunes are old favourites: Crossing the Minch, The Dark Island, Lexy MacAskill and, slightly questionably, Itchy Fingers. These familiar melodies are accompanied by some of Ross’s own compositions on pipes and whistle. The best of these, the very pleasant whistle tune Celtic Cottage, also featured on the Dragoons’ 2002 album Parallel Tracks. Years before the term “bagrock” entered common usage, Parallel Tracks was the first recording to successfully integrate bagpipes with modern rock band accompaniment across an entire album, arguably making it one of the most important piping CDs of the last two decades. In Twisted Tradition, however, Ross supplies the majority of the backing through his electronic MIDI arrangements. Although the musical versatility involved is admirable, the effects lack depth and resonance, frequently producing a synth-like sound that begs to be modern but actually comes over as dated. However, there are plus points. The most successful integration of MIDI backing and melody instruments occurs in the slower numbers, especially The Piper and the haunting Cuimhneachan. Perhaps the recording’s greatest strength is Ross’s talent as an arranger of pipe music, shown by the artfully constructed bridges. Still, the audience for the album remains hard to gauge. It is not right for the lucrative easy listening market the Spirit of the Glen series targeted, but the backing style is too tame for the younger audience that

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NEW PRODUCTS might be lured by the edgier works of the Peatbog Fairies or Martyn Bennett. More worryingly, pipers may feel it reminds them too strongly of the synthheavy experiments of the 1990s. Ross Munro helped break new ground with the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, and is undeniably a gifted multi-instrumentalist. It is a shame, therefore, that Twisted Tradition returns to familiar territory we thought we had left behind years ago. l stuart milne

Battlefield Band Beg & Borrow COMD2107

T

hey say in rock and pop music that you have really made it when your name gets shortened and is still instantly recognised (The Stones, Britney, Madge). In that case the Batties, like the Tannies and the Binkies, have truly made it to folk stardom. Few would grudge them that, after reaching a landmark 30th album, which is remarkable in a genre where artists often only make one. Battlefield Band have not only forged the path walked by many folkies since, but they have continued to travel it and have made a huge contribution to the burgeoning folk scene, both in Scotland and overseas. This album sees the band (Mike Katz, Alasdair White and Sean O’Donnell in this incarnation) invite 12 other musicians to celebrate the musical links between Scotland and Ireland. This guest list is impressive with Christine Primrose, Alison Kinnaird, Jim Kilpatrick, John Martin, Mike Whellans, Barry Gray, Nuala Kennedy, Leo McCann, Aaron Jones, Robin Morton, Don Meade and Tony DeMarco all adding their special talents to the mix.

The album kicks off in traditional Battlefield Band style with a set of pipe led reels, although both Alasdair White and guest Leo McCann get to shine alongside Mike Katz’s driving piping. There is absolutely no doubt that the Battlefield Band were in the vanguard of what is now regarded as the Scottish “folk sound” with the pipes front and centre. As the opening set demonstrates, it is still something they know how to do very well. Leo also helps out on the delightful slow air and jig set The Glasgow Lasses/The Scottish Lovers, which gently rolls along proving that good tunes don’t always have to played at Mach two. The Blantyre Explosion is a classic Battlefield Band type of song. Bringing the tragedy of the 1877 Blantyre mine tragedy down to a very personal level, the song

resonates as both a very private grief and a very public one. Sean takes the lead on vocals using a different tune (picked up from Fermanagh farmer John Maguire) to that usually associated with the song. Christine Primrose adds a poignant reworking of the last verse in Gaelic that will raise a hair on all but the most waxed necks. She also takes the lead on a Scots Gaelic version of the Irish classic An Gille Mear (despite the song being about the Jacobite Rising and the ‘Gille Mear’ himself Prince Charlie). With some local vocal support from Nuala Kennedy, this is a beautiful rendition of a ‘well kent’ song and one of the highlights of the CD. Other highlights across the 18 tracks include Aaron Jones taking the lead on Robert Tannahill’s One Night In My Youth (to the tune of The Lass who Wears the Green), Mike Whellans doing his harmonica magic on McCarthy’s Quickstep (better known in Scotland as Bugle Horn) and the Drunken Piper, and Alison Kinnaird and Alasdair White’s sweet duet on the Robin Morton tune Ellen’s Dream. Sharing music shared by the Scottish and Irish traditions is the tag line of this CD and that is exactly what it does. It’s well known that many tunes in Scotland have what can only be described as a common ancestry and many a good natured pub argument has centred on who can claim ownership of a song or tune. Battlefield Band have been a big factor in the breaking of any ‘walls’ between the traditions and this album is a fitting way to demonstrate that. Here’s to the next 30 albums from the Batties. l chris mackenzie

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